Skip to main content

Wacker Neuson rebar tiers at Queensferry

When the Queensferry Crossing over the Forth Estuary opens at the end of 2016, it will be the third landmark bridge to be built spanning this short stretch of water. This 2.7km structure is lying alongside the existing road bridge and the historic rail bridge and is the centrepiece of the upgrade to Scotland’s key cross-Forth transport corridor. Responsible for the construction is Forth Crossing Bridge Constructors – FCBC, a consortium of companies from Germany, Spain, the US and the UK. Construction
February 7, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
When the Queensferry Crossing over the Forth Estuary opens at the end of 2016, it will be the third landmark bridge to be built spanning this short stretch of water. This 2.7km structure is lying alongside the existing road bridge and the historic rail bridge and is the centrepiece of the upgrade to Scotland’s key cross-Forth transport corridor.

Responsible for the construction is Forth Crossing Bridge Constructors – FCBC, a consortium of companies from Germany, Spain, the US and the UK.

Construction work will take place 207m above sea level. Around 150,000tonnes of concrete will be poured and more than 37,000km of cabling will be used.

Also used will be four DF16 rebar tiers and 377,000 ties from 1651 Wacker Neuson. The DF16s tie “shear links” on rebar on the deck section of the bridge. Steel required for the final deck weighs 35,000tonnes - the equivalent weight of nearly 200 Boeing 747s.

“Thanks to the upright position of the DF16, work is now much more back-friendly,” explained John Rodgers, FCBC works manager. The mechanical device uses a proven twin-wire mechanism which ties up to 1,000 uniform and firm knots per hour.

Steelworkers are making 33,000 ties per section with the mechanical tier. The operator is independent of a battery and the necessary charging time. In addition, no scrap wire is produced which must be removed at the end of the work.

To compact the fresh concrete John and his team use 40 high-frequency internal vibrators of the IFRU series. “We use two different variants of the vibrator head size, 57mm and 38mm,” said Rodgers. They can be simply connected to the 1-phase power supply and are ready for operation.

Models in the IRFU series have an integrated frequency converter. No additional frequency converters are needed to operate this internal vibrator. Simply connect to a plug receptacle. Also in conjunction with a generator and with fluctuating input voltages IRFU is safe and reliable. Thanks to the complete potted electronic components, there is no danger of an electric shock.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Record breaking ABM bridge beams installed near Raith, Scotland
    September 30, 2016
    One of the largest mobile cranes in the UK, a 1,500tonne capacity unit, recently positioned nine 90tonne 42m pre-stressed bridge beams by ABM Precast Solutions. The massive W-beams were hoisted into place at Junction 5, the Raith Interchange, on Scotland’s M74 motorway – part of the M8-M73-M74 motorway improvements project.
  • Bridge deck launched for the New Wear Crossing, Sunderland (Video)
    March 30, 2017

    The 300m bridge deck of Sunderland’s New Wear Crossing has been successfully launched across the river.

    The 4,750tonne concrete and steel deck was resting on the south side of the River Wear from where it was inched across to touch the north side in a 20-hour operation. It had to slide through the twin arched towers of the bridge’s double pylon on its way to its final position to connect the city regions of Pallion to the south and Castletown to the north.

  • Emovis continues with Mersey Gateway tolling
    March 18, 2022
    Emovis provides collection of tolls and charges for both Mersey Gateway Crossing and the older 87m-long Silver Jubilee Bridge through its merseyflow brand name.
  • Cleveland Bridge is all decked out on the England’s A14 scheme
    June 4, 2019
    As part of Highways England’s A14 upgrade project from Cambridge to Huntington, Cleveland Bridge installed two 1,050tonne pre-assembled bridge decks in just 11 hours. Months of detailed planning and client liaison ensured the 47.5m-long bridge decks, each containing 330tonnes of steel and 720tonnes of concrete, were successfully travelled to the site and lowered onto the abutments. On-site civil engineering works were undertaken by the A14 Integrated Delivery Team, a joint venture between Costain,